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Orthodox Jewish Feminist Challenges Traditional Patriarchy

Orthodox Feminist

First Posted: 05/23/2011 10:57 am Updated: 07/23/2011 5:12 am

By Kevin Douglas Grant
Religion News Service

JERUSALEM (RNS) Tova Hartman opens the door to her apartment with a warm smile, speaking softly and casually dressed. With her down-to-earth femininity, she doesn't exactly look like a rabble-rouser within Orthodox Judaism.

Which, perhaps, is precisely what makes her so effective.

The 53-year old psychologist and Jewish scholar has used her decidedly feminist Orthodox synagogue to mount a formidable challenge to the male bastion of religious orthodoxy.

"I don't think that feminism is against the Jewish tradition," she said. "I think it challenges the Jewish tradition."

Nine years ago, Hartman's living room became the first home of Shira Hadasha, a modern Orthodox congregation that now has several hundred members and outposts in the U.S., Canada and Israel. She's one of a handful of rabbis and scholars working to push Orthodox Judaism into a more egalitarian future.

And for the most part, the tradition isn't having it.

"Shira Hadasha came about after trying to change a lot of the local shuls and not succeeding," she said, using the Yiddish word for synagogue. "We understand and accept that our agenda does not resonate yet with modern Orthodox establishment shuls and that's OK. They don't want to change, and they don't have to."

Some Shira Hadasha practices are unusual by Orthodox Jewish standards. The group uses a distributed leadership model. Hartman is not the rabbi -- there isn't one -- but she is the de facto matriarch. Bat mitzvah ceremonies are available for girls, and women can lead services.

Members emphasize hospitality, welcoming people with disabilities, the elderly, those with mental illness, single mothers and even non-Jews. No one ever leaves Friday night gatherings without a Shabbat dinner to attend.

"Everybody said, 'Nobody has a need for this kind of shul,"' she said. "But the job of the leader is also to create needs."

The Shira Hadasha sanctuary follows the traditional practice of dividing men and women with a separation barrier. But the Torah sits in the center of the room, allowing both men and women to approach it from either side.

"There is," she said, "no back of the bus."

The idea that Shira Hadasha considers itself Orthodox is seen as an anomaly by most within the tradition, making Hartman at once a pariah and a beloved religious leader.

"There are many ways to approach God. I never think there's one way -- or one religion," she explained. "I do deeply believe that God listens to different kinds of prayers, but for me (traditional orthodoxy) was untenable."

At times, she has felt trapped by the patriarchy and that her only alternative was to leave. For several years, she abandoned Jewish studies entirely to pursue psychology.

"I know about leaving," she said, looking back. "People would say to me 'If you don't like it, go change it.' What they mean is, 'Go away and change it.' But there's power to staying."

Not surprisingly, many Orthodox rabbis have preferred Hartman had stayed away. Rabbi Ya'acov Ariel, the chief rabbi of Tel Aviv's Ramat Gan district, has called Hartman's group "the product of a radical feminist agenda."

"Men who come to the synagogue to pray do not want to be distracted by the prominent appearance of women," Ariel said.

Yet Hartman's acolytes, including Rabbi Asher Lopatin of Chicago's Anshe Sholom B'nai Israel modern Orthodox synagogue, embrace her teachings, regardless of what the Orthodox hierarchy says.

"Tova is one of my heroes," Lopatin said. "Especially for Orthodoxy, feminism is a foreign, scary concept. But there's a feminine side of men and a feminine side to prayer, and that makes us better Jews."

Hartman said she isn't out to battle her critics, or even try to convince them to change.

"For me, feminism didn't come about because there's only a problem with Orthodox rabbis," she said. "It came about because there's a deep fissure in our community about how we treat different people."

There has been evidence of change in recent years, but it's been slow. Two years ago, Rabbi Avi Weiss and Rabba Sara Hurwitz co-founded Yeshivat Maharat, a rabbinical school for women in New York. But modern Orthodox rabbinical councils have voted to refuse female members, or even acknowledge them as equals.

In Israel, unlike North America, there is no separation between church and state, and the Ministry of Religion funds thousands of synagogues throughout the country. Not surprisingly, Shira Hadasha is not one of them.

Yet as an independent community, Hartman's community is able to operate free of many state mandates.

"The matter of religion and politics is where religion goes bad," she said. "I think it's horrible for religion, and it's horrible for the state."

While Hartman supports the idea of the Jewish state and the Israeli law that grants citizenship to Jews who migrate to the Jewish state, she has little patience for Israel's current religious and political leadership.

She particularly laments one impact of Zionism -- the historic rift between Jews who believe the Messiah can be hastened by a Jewish return to the Holy Land and those who believe any human attempt to do so is blasphemy -- on both Judaism and Israel.

"Zionism broke the Jewish community in half," Hartman said, arguing that Zionism has put ultra-Orthodox traditionalists in charge of Israeli life and religion.

Hartman is the first to acknowledge the limited appeal of her movement, saying she's not sure whether her own daughters are likely to follow in her footsteps.

"Not everybody's clapping," she said. At the same time, "What we're doing has religious integrity."

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By Kevin Douglas Grant Religion News Service JERUSALEM (RNS) Tova Hartman opens the door to her apartment with a warm smile, speaking softly and casually dressed. With her down-to-earth femininity...
By Kevin Douglas Grant Religion News Service JERUSALEM (RNS) Tova Hartman opens the door to her apartment with a warm smile, speaking softly and casually dressed. With her down-to-earth femininity...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:37 AM on 07/15/2011
as long as males are running "the business" the women can't advance here. just like the Catholic church with different symbols!
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cosmiczulu
let the good times roll
03:23 AM on 07/15/2011
People's opinion's and feelings of what Judaism is or should be is very nice and very Jewish, but it is not Torah.
05:05 PM on 07/06/2011
Why not join the reform sect? I mean if someone wants a feminized version of Judaism, doesn't that already exist?
01:46 PM on 07/08/2011
Mr Houston,
I don't know if you're Jewish or not, but your comment is quite incisive. In fact, I think that Tova Hartman and Avi Weiss will eventually succeed in their quest. They will end up creating their own new "branch" of Judaism. We will have Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, and Ortho-Feminism. Ortho-Feminism is a form of Jewish practice that is not driven by Torah, it is driven by Feminism with strong Torah-culture overtones and deep emotional/sentimental attachments to many traditional practices. The main point is that when there is a conflict between Feminist ideology and Torah, Feminism will be the final arbiter of the proper direction.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
04:47 AM on 07/01/2011
I heard of another religion "You can believe anything you want in our religion as long as you agree with just a couple doctrine we must all hold to". I have heard that one way to help achieve success is to "Be all things to all people". Some start with the attitude, "God anointed us or our ancestors to be His people, but once he gave us permission to be what we are, then from then on we do not have to pay much attention to what He wants and although the original mandate said different, now we can be atheist, homosexuals, thieves, liars or any king of persons we want to be because we have been sanctioned to be. Some try to get converts by appealing to a certain group, while another may research the Holy Scriptures to a very fine degree and encourage all its members to do their best to study the Scriptures in order to get the best understanding of what the Scriptures say Our Creator wants. If we are to show the proper respect for Our Creator and what He has done for us what would be the proper attitude to embrace?
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
07:49 AM on 06/10/2011
The Israeli Orthodox Rabbinical leadership has held sway over the interpretations of Jewish practice to a degree totally disproportionate to their limited population.  They have also managed to get almost everything wrong as they insist on maintaining 17th Century European traditions of misogyny and exclusion that are more in line with the Wahabbiist Fundamentalist Muslims than 21st Century realities. What the Rabbi's will never admit, is there is no Scriptural justification for Rabbi's--there existence is a reinterpretation of old traditions that arose around the time that Jesus lived.  The Rabbinic movement arose out of the Pharisees, when it became apparent that the traditional practice of the religion centered on the Temple in Jerusalem, and ritual sacrifice would not be sustainable as more and more Jews dispersed to Yemen, Rome and Europe, Persia and the Levant, Africa and Asia.

There are still Jewish groups such as the Karaites, who do not follow Rabbi's and practice a form of Judaism that is based on a more ancient tradition.

I wish Dr. Hartman and her congregation every success.  Anything that undermines the intolerance of differences and too often seen hatred that are the hallmarks of religious Fundamentalism deserves to be nurtured.

.
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06:17 AM on 06/07/2011
And it seems Eve was never the same afterwards, and neither was Adam himself. The text gives us no hint at how many years they lived together in the Garden before this world-shaking spoiling of their innocence, but a careful examination of the proceeding verses does hint at Adam's departure from Eve for well over 120 years, and his return to dwell with his proto-human relatives the Rambam called "the rulers of the fields"..after which it simply said, "And Adam knew his wife again."
It may have been the direct result of her Curse: "your desire shall be towards you husband", in the sense of stretching out, to reach; the will to master; to overcome, by subtle his rule, and beyond him, God's rule..
But now, Adam had to rule over her, and ever since Adam, men have only with great reluctance tried to do this job, and now they have almost completely fail..now, its just as Isaiah said" As for my people, children are their oppressors, and women rule over them..."
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05:42 AM on 06/07/2011
of course, Ha'shem's unimpeachable Masculinity is the foremost of His character, but If Ms. Hartmann wishes so desparately to find to place give a feminine voice to something equally as important, she could ask just why is was that so many of God's chosen ones were Patriarchs, not Matriarchs?

And, as I believe she knows Hebrew at least as well as I do myself, don't see why she can't probe the this mystery in the Tanach, or consult the many Tractates on the subject; cause Jews just don't do theology anymore; they do Tractates, and they do them better than anyone else in the world.

She should ask the question: why was there no hint of male dominance anywhere in the Genesis account of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden until after Mother Eve went away from her husband and had that infamous talk with the serpent in utter defiance of God's warning to them?

She should ask: why would we now need to heal the world, if Eve's sin hadn't plunged it into sickness and death in the first place?
And foremost of all, why is modern Feminism's will-to-power so much resemble the curse of the Mother of all women, seen in the Hebrew word "Tesh-oo-kaw" Desire, to rule..the universe?
12:09 AM on 06/21/2011
3000 years ago, like most cultures, Israelites were led by men. But even so, Abraham is told by God to listen to his wife Sarah. Her opinion overruled his on the matter of casting Ishmael out.

I doubt you could get a real posek to say God is male. The problem is Hebrew is a gendered language. Even so, the very traditional have the Shabbat as the unification of feminine and masculine attribute of God, and Shabbat is considered the ideal state.

Of interest is also the 'curses' after the eating of the fruit. They are a statement of condition, not a commandment. For example, if man could find a way to earn his living without sweat, do you really think the elders would forbid it?
10:49 PM on 06/05/2011
I attended Shira Hadasha for Friday Night services a couple of times whilst I was living in Jerusalem. I have to say this place is amazing and it completely changed and impacted the way I look at religion. It is fantastic to see the Huffington Post give this some coverage!
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CarlyHope
04:53 PM on 05/31/2011
Go TOVA! My Mother is a Rabbi and I have seen the struggles she faced. You are providing an amazing model for Jewish women worldwide
11:17 PM on 06/01/2011
your mother is actually a pope! the christians were the first break off of judaism before reform and conservative. its sad that thousands of years ago there were qualified woman (see deborah, esther, miriam etc.) today to become a female rabbi a feminist doctorate is neccessary regardless of a total lack of even the basics of judaism.
hfpf
Wake up World.
01:20 AM on 06/03/2011
??????today to become a female rabbi a feminist doctorate is neccessary regardless of a total lack of even the of judaism. ???????

Your comment is ridiculous, and totally inaccurate.
12:10 AM on 06/21/2011
Dangerously close to lashon hara.
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Daveh88
SLTFATF
10:47 PM on 05/25/2011
The problem is Shirah Chadash has done things in direct violation of the Shulchan Aruch. Some things are in the gray area but they have "crossed the line" in the past and therefor should be considered conservadox not orthodox. There are real Orthodox feminists, but these women aren't.
hfpf
Wake up World.
01:22 AM on 06/03/2011
>>>>The problem is Shirah Chadash has done things in direct violation of the Shulchan Aruch..

Name them.

The Shulchan Aruch as formidable and comprehensive as may be, IS NOT, Torah M'Sinia.
12:11 AM on 06/21/2011
YOu might also ask if it's the Shulchan Aruch or the Kitzur (the latter being a lot more restrictive than the former)
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Deacon2
Namaste y'all
12:41 PM on 05/23/2011
The Bible turned away from the Sacred Feminine of may of the religions that preceded. In the myth of the creation Adams first wife was Lilith. She proved to be non-subservient and God whisked her into the heavens where she became an evil goddess. God then created Eve from Adams rib. Of course the Lilith story did not make the Biblical cut. From then on the chauvinists took over. The wife of Lot was turned to a pillar of salt for looking back at Sodom and Gomorra, while Lot was allowed a drunken orgy with his daughters. That story should be included in all the "Family Values" sermons.
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JewishPhysician
fraternity, trust, discourse
03:08 PM on 05/24/2011
Lot was considered too inebriated to know what he had done and was fooled by his daughters. That idea of lillith? A funny thing to consider, but really that is not what the Creator Wrote in the Bible. Or else you think that the entire bible is a scam?
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Deacon2
Namaste y'all
09:23 AM on 05/25/2011
Thank you for your comment. It's hard to say the Bible is a scam when so many believe in it's absolutism. There are at least 3 different versions of the Creation story, Genesis 1, with Adam and Eve created after animals, and Genesis 2, with God creating humanity by blowing air into the nostrils of a mound of clay, where the animals are created after Adam and are brought to him for naming. Then in Job, God fights the raging seas and Leviathan to set the land masses in place. If one of these is stories is the Word of the Creator, then the others are suspect. Regards
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Daveh88
SLTFATF
10:43 PM on 05/25/2011
Lilith is not of the orthodox tradition. She is mentioned in mystical writings and it is nearly unanimous of Kabbalists that it is a figurative figure not a real person.